Updates an alarm model. Any alarms that were created based on the previous version are deleted and then created again as new data arrives.
See also: AWS API Documentation
update-alarm-model
--alarm-model-name <value>
[--alarm-model-description <value>]
--role-arn <value>
[--severity <value>]
--alarm-rule <value>
[--alarm-notification <value>]
[--alarm-event-actions <value>]
[--alarm-capabilities <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
[--debug]
[--endpoint-url <value>]
[--no-verify-ssl]
[--no-paginate]
[--output <value>]
[--query <value>]
[--profile <value>]
[--region <value>]
[--version <value>]
[--color <value>]
[--no-sign-request]
[--ca-bundle <value>]
[--cli-read-timeout <value>]
[--cli-connect-timeout <value>]
[--cli-binary-format <value>]
[--no-cli-pager]
[--cli-auto-prompt]
[--no-cli-auto-prompt]
--alarm-model-name
(string)
The name of the alarm model.
--alarm-model-description
(string)
The description of the alarm model.
--role-arn
(string)
The ARN of the IAM role that allows the alarm to perform actions and access AWS resources. For more information, see Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) in the AWS General Reference .
--severity
(integer)
A non-negative integer that reflects the severity level of the alarm.
--alarm-rule
(structure)
Defines when your alarm is invoked.
simpleRule -> (structure)
A rule that compares an input property value to a threshold value with a comparison operator.
inputProperty -> (string)
The value on the left side of the comparison operator. You can specify an AWS IoT Events input attribute as an input property.
comparisonOperator -> (string)
The comparison operator.
threshold -> (string)
The value on the right side of the comparison operator. You can enter a number or specify an AWS IoT Events input attribute.
Shorthand Syntax:
simpleRule={inputProperty=string,comparisonOperator=string,threshold=string}
JSON Syntax:
{
"simpleRule": {
"inputProperty": "string",
"comparisonOperator": "GREATER"|"GREATER_OR_EQUAL"|"LESS"|"LESS_OR_EQUAL"|"EQUAL"|"NOT_EQUAL",
"threshold": "string"
}
}
--alarm-notification
(structure)
Contains information about one or more notification actions.
notificationActions -> (list)
Contains the notification settings of an alarm model. The settings apply to all alarms that were created based on this alarm model.
(structure)
Contains the notification settings of an alarm model. The settings apply to all alarms that were created based on this alarm model.
action -> (structure)
Specifies an AWS Lambda function to manage alarm notifications. You can create one or use the AWS Lambda function provided by AWS IoT Events .
lambdaAction -> (structure)
Calls a Lambda function, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.
functionArn -> (string)
The ARN of the Lambda function that is executed.
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message to a Lambda function.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.smsConfigurations -> (list)
Contains the configuration information of SMS notifications.
(structure)
Contains the configuration information of SMS notifications.
senderId -> (string)
The sender ID.
additionalMessage -> (string)
The message that you want to send. The message can be up to 200 characters.
recipients -> (list)
Specifies one or more recipients who receive the message.
Warning
You must add the users that receive SMS messages to your AWS SSO store .
(structure)
The information that identifies the recipient.
ssoIdentity -> (structure)
The AWS Single Sign-On (AWS SSO) authentication information.
identityStoreId -> (string)
The ID of the AWS SSO identity store.
userId -> (string)
The user ID.
emailConfigurations -> (list)
Contains the configuration information of email notifications.
(structure)
Contains the configuration information of email notifications.
from -> (string)
The email address that sends emails.
Warning
If you use the AWS IoT Events managed AWS Lambda function to manage your emails, you must verify the email address that sends emails in Amazon SES .
content -> (structure)
Contains the subject and message of an email.
subject -> (string)
The subject of the email.
additionalMessage -> (string)
The message that you want to send. The message can be up to 200 characters.
recipients -> (structure)
Contains the information of one or more recipients who receive the emails.
Warning
You must add the users that receive emails to your AWS SSO store .
to -> (list)
Specifies one or more recipients who receive the email.
(structure)
The information that identifies the recipient.
ssoIdentity -> (structure)
The AWS Single Sign-On (AWS SSO) authentication information.
identityStoreId -> (string)
The ID of the AWS SSO identity store.
userId -> (string)
The user ID.
JSON Syntax:
{ "notificationActions": [ { "action": { "lambdaAction": { "functionArn": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } } }, "smsConfigurations": [ { "senderId": "string", "additionalMessage": "string", "recipients": [ { "ssoIdentity": { "identityStoreId": "string", "userId": "string" } } ... ] } ... ], "emailConfigurations": [ { "from": "string", "content": { "subject": "string", "additionalMessage": "string" }, "recipients": { "to": [ { "ssoIdentity": { "identityStoreId": "string", "userId": "string" } } ... ] } } ... ] } ... ] }
--alarm-event-actions
(structure)Contains information about one or more alarm actions.
alarmActions -> (list)
Specifies one or more supported actions to receive notifications when the alarm state changes.
(structure)
Specifies one of the following actions to receive notifications when the alarm state changes.
sns -> (structure)
Information required to publish the Amazon SNS message.
targetArn -> (string)
The ARN of the Amazon SNS target where the message is sent.
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message as an Amazon SNS push notification.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.iotTopicPublish -> (structure)
Information required to publish the MQTT message through the AWS IoT message broker.
mqttTopic -> (string)
The MQTT topic of the message. You can use a string expression that includes variables (
$variable.<variable-name>
) and input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
) as the topic string.payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you publish a message to an AWS IoT Core topic.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.lambda -> (structure)
Calls a Lambda function, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.
functionArn -> (string)
The ARN of the Lambda function that is executed.
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message to a Lambda function.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.iotEvents -> (structure)
Sends an AWS IoT Events input, passing in information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action.
inputName -> (string)
The name of the AWS IoT Events input where the data is sent.
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message to an AWS IoT Events input.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.sqs -> (structure)
Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon SQS queue.
queueUrl -> (string)
The URL of the SQS queue where the data is written.
useBase64 -> (boolean)
Set this to TRUE if you want the data to be base-64 encoded before it is written to the queue. Otherwise, set this to FALSE.
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message to an Amazon SQS queue.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.firehose -> (structure)
Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
deliveryStreamName -> (string)
The name of the Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream where the data is written.
separator -> (string)
A character separator that is used to separate records written to the Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream. Valid values are: ‘n’ (newline), ‘t’ (tab), ‘rn’ (Windows newline), ‘,’ (comma).
payload -> (structure)
You can configure the action payload when you send a message to an Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose delivery stream.
contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.dynamoDB -> (structure)
Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created. The standard action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . One column of the DynamoDB table receives all attribute-value pairs in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in
DynamoDBAction
. The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.Examples
For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the
hashKeyType
parameter can be'STRING'
.For references, you must specify either variables or input values. For example, the value for the
hashKeyField
parameter can be$input.GreenhouseInput.name
.For a substitution template, you must use
${}
, and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates. In the following example, the value for thehashKeyValue
parameter uses a substitution template.'${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 6 / 5 + 32} in Fahrenheit'
For a string concatenation, you must use
+
. A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates. In the following example, the value for thetableName
parameter uses a string concatenation.'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
If the defined payload type is a string,
DynamoDBAction
writes non-JSON data to the DynamoDB table as binary data. The DynamoDB console displays the data as Base64-encoded text. The value for thepayloadField
parameter is<payload-field>_raw
.hashKeyType -> (string)
The data type for the hash key (also called the partition key). You can specify the following values:
'STRING'
- The hash key is a string.
'NUMBER'
- The hash key is a number.If you don’t specify
hashKeyType
, the default value is'STRING'
.hashKeyField -> (string)
The name of the hash key (also called the partition key). The
hashKeyField
value must match the partition key of the target DynamoDB table.hashKeyValue -> (string)
The value of the hash key (also called the partition key).
rangeKeyType -> (string)
The data type for the range key (also called the sort key), You can specify the following values:
'STRING'
- The range key is a string.
'NUMBER'
- The range key is number.If you don’t specify
rangeKeyField
, the default value is'STRING'
.rangeKeyField -> (string)
The name of the range key (also called the sort key). The
rangeKeyField
value must match the sort key of the target DynamoDB table.rangeKeyValue -> (string)
The value of the range key (also called the sort key).
operation -> (string)
The type of operation to perform. You can specify the following values:
'INSERT'
- Insert data as a new item into the DynamoDB table. This item uses the specified hash key as a partition key. If you specified a range key, the item uses the range key as a sort key.
'UPDATE'
- Update an existing item of the DynamoDB table with new data. This item’s partition key must match the specified hash key. If you specified a range key, the range key must match the item’s sort key.
'DELETE'
- Delete an existing item of the DynamoDB table. This item’s partition key must match the specified hash key. If you specified a range key, the range key must match the item’s sort key.If you don’t specify this parameter, AWS IoT Events triggers the
'INSERT'
operation.payloadField -> (string)
The name of the DynamoDB column that receives the action payload.
If you don’t specify this parameter, the name of the DynamoDB column is
payload
.tableName -> (string)
The name of the DynamoDB table. The
tableName
value must match the table name of the target DynamoDB table.payload -> (structure)
Information needed to configure the payload.
By default, AWS IoT Events generates a standard payload in JSON for any action. This action payload contains all attribute-value pairs that have the information about the detector model instance and the event triggered the action. To configure the action payload, you can use
contentExpression
.contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.dynamoDBv2 -> (structure)
Defines an action to write to the Amazon DynamoDB table that you created. The default action payload contains all the information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action. You can customize the payload . A separate column of the DynamoDB table receives one attribute-value pair in the payload that you specify.
You must use expressions for all parameters in
DynamoDBv2Action
. The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates.Examples
For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the
tableName
parameter can be'GreenhouseTemperatureTable'
.For references, you must specify either variables or input values. For example, the value for the
tableName
parameter can be$variable.ddbtableName
.For a substitution template, you must use
${}
, and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates. In the following example, the value for thecontentExpression
parameter inPayload
uses a substitution template.'{\"sensorID\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.sensor_id}\", \"temperature\": \"${$input.GreenhouseInput.temperature * 9 / 5 + 32}\"}'
For a string concatenation, you must use
+
. A string concatenation can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates. In the following example, the value for thetableName
parameter uses a string concatenation.'GreenhouseTemperatureTable ' + $input.GreenhouseInput.date
For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
The value for the
type
parameter inPayload
must beJSON
.tableName -> (string)
The name of the DynamoDB table.
payload -> (structure)
Information needed to configure the payload.
By default, AWS IoT Events generates a standard payload in JSON for any action. This action payload contains all attribute-value pairs that have the information about the detector model instance and the event triggered the action. To configure the action payload, you can use
contentExpression
.contentExpression -> (string)
The content of the payload. You can use a string expression that includes quoted strings (
'<string>'
), variables ($variable.<variable-name>
), input values ($input.<input-name>.<path-to-datum>
), string concatenations, and quoted strings that contain${}
as the content. The recommended maximum size of a content expression is 1 KB.type -> (string)
The value of the payload type can be either
STRING
orJSON
.iotSiteWise -> (structure)
Sends information about the detector model instance and the event that triggered the action to a specified asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise.
You must use expressions for all parameters in
IotSiteWiseAction
. The expressions accept literals, operators, functions, references, and substitutions templates.Examples
For literal values, the expressions must contain single quotes. For example, the value for the
propertyAlias
parameter can be'/company/windfarm/3/turbine/7/temperature'
.For references, you must specify either variables or input values. For example, the value for the
assetId
parameter can be$input.TurbineInput.assetId1
.For a substitution template, you must use
${}
, and the template must be in single quotes. A substitution template can also contain a combination of literals, operators, functions, references, and substitution templates. In the following example, the value for thepropertyAlias
parameter uses a substitution template.'company/windfarm/${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.windfarmID}/turbine/ ${$input.TemperatureInput.sensorData.turbineID}/temperature'
You must specify either
propertyAlias
or bothassetId
andpropertyId
to identify the target asset property in AWS IoT SiteWise.For more information, see Expressions in the AWS IoT Events Developer Guide .
entryId -> (string)
A unique identifier for this entry. You can use the entry ID to track which data entry causes an error in case of failure. The default is a new unique identifier.
assetId -> (string)
The ID of the asset that has the specified property.
propertyId -> (string)
The ID of the asset property.
propertyAlias -> (string)
The alias of the asset property.
propertyValue -> (structure)
The value to send to the asset property. This value contains timestamp, quality, and value (TQV) information.
value -> (structure)
The value to send to an asset property.
stringValue -> (string)
The asset property value is a string. You must use an expression, and the evaluated result should be a string.
integerValue -> (string)
The asset property value is an integer. You must use an expression, and the evaluated result should be an integer.
doubleValue -> (string)
The asset property value is a double. You must use an expression, and the evaluated result should be a double.
booleanValue -> (string)
The asset property value is a Boolean value that must be
'TRUE'
or'FALSE'
. You must use an expression, and the evaluated result should be a Boolean value.timestamp -> (structure)
The timestamp associated with the asset property value. The default is the current event time.
timeInSeconds -> (string)
The timestamp, in seconds, in the Unix epoch format. The valid range is between 1-31556889864403199.
offsetInNanos -> (string)
The nanosecond offset converted from
timeInSeconds
. The valid range is between 0-999999999.quality -> (string)
The quality of the asset property value. The value must be
'GOOD'
,'BAD'
, or'UNCERTAIN'
.JSON Syntax:
{ "alarmActions": [ { "sns": { "targetArn": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "iotTopicPublish": { "mqttTopic": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "lambda": { "functionArn": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "iotEvents": { "inputName": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "sqs": { "queueUrl": "string", "useBase64": true|false, "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "firehose": { "deliveryStreamName": "string", "separator": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "dynamoDB": { "hashKeyType": "string", "hashKeyField": "string", "hashKeyValue": "string", "rangeKeyType": "string", "rangeKeyField": "string", "rangeKeyValue": "string", "operation": "string", "payloadField": "string", "tableName": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "dynamoDBv2": { "tableName": "string", "payload": { "contentExpression": "string", "type": "STRING"|"JSON" } }, "iotSiteWise": { "entryId": "string", "assetId": "string", "propertyId": "string", "propertyAlias": "string", "propertyValue": { "value": { "stringValue": "string", "integerValue": "string", "doubleValue": "string", "booleanValue": "string" }, "timestamp": { "timeInSeconds": "string", "offsetInNanos": "string" }, "quality": "string" } } } ... ] }
--alarm-capabilities
(structure)Contains the configuration information of alarm state changes.
initializationConfiguration -> (structure)
Specifies the default alarm state. The configuration applies to all alarms that were created based on this alarm model.
disabledOnInitialization -> (boolean)
The value must be
TRUE
orFALSE
. IfFALSE
, all alarm instances created based on the alarm model are activated. The default value isTRUE
.acknowledgeFlow -> (structure)
Specifies whether to get notified for alarm state changes.
enabled -> (boolean)
The value must be
TRUE
orFALSE
. IfTRUE
, you receive a notification when the alarm state changes. You must choose to acknowledge the notification before the alarm state can return toNORMAL
. IfFALSE
, you won’t receive notifications. The alarm automatically changes to theNORMAL
state when the input property value returns to the specified range.Shorthand Syntax:
initializationConfiguration={disabledOnInitialization=boolean},acknowledgeFlow={enabled=boolean}JSON Syntax:
{ "initializationConfiguration": { "disabledOnInitialization": true|false }, "acknowledgeFlow": { "enabled": true|false } }
--cli-input-json
|--cli-input-yaml
(string) Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by--generate-cli-skeleton
. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with--cli-input-yaml
.
--generate-cli-skeleton
(string) Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the valueinput
, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for--cli-input-json
. Similarly, if providedyaml-input
it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with--cli-input-yaml
. If provided with the valueoutput
, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.Global Options¶
--debug
(boolean)Turn on debug logging.
--endpoint-url
(string)Override command’s default URL with the given URL.
--no-verify-ssl
(boolean)By default, the AWS CLI uses SSL when communicating with AWS services. For each SSL connection, the AWS CLI will verify SSL certificates. This option overrides the default behavior of verifying SSL certificates.
--no-paginate
(boolean)Disable automatic pagination.
--output
(string)The formatting style for command output.
json
text
table
yaml
yaml-stream
--query
(string)A JMESPath query to use in filtering the response data.
--profile
(string)Use a specific profile from your credential file.
--region
(string)The region to use. Overrides config/env settings.
--version
(string)Display the version of this tool.
--color
(string)Turn on/off color output.
on
off
auto
--no-sign-request
(boolean)Do not sign requests. Credentials will not be loaded if this argument is provided.
--ca-bundle
(string)The CA certificate bundle to use when verifying SSL certificates. Overrides config/env settings.
--cli-read-timeout
(int)The maximum socket read time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket read will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-connect-timeout
(int)The maximum socket connect time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket connect will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-binary-format
(string)The formatting style to be used for binary blobs. The default format is base64. The base64 format expects binary blobs to be provided as a base64 encoded string. The raw-in-base64-out format preserves compatibility with AWS CLI V1 behavior and binary values must be passed literally. When providing contents from a file that map to a binary blob
fileb://
will always be treated as binary and use the file contents directly regardless of thecli-binary-format
setting. When usingfile://
the file contents will need to properly formatted for the configuredcli-binary-format
.
base64
raw-in-base64-out
--no-cli-pager
(boolean)Disable cli pager for output.
--cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)Automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
--no-cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)Disable automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
Output¶
creationTime -> (timestamp)
The time the alarm model was created, in the Unix epoch format.
alarmModelArn -> (string)
The ARN of the alarm model. For more information, see Amazon Resource Names (ARNs) in the AWS General Reference .
alarmModelVersion -> (string)
The version of the alarm model.
lastUpdateTime -> (timestamp)
The time the alarm model was last updated, in the Unix epoch format.
status -> (string)
The status of the alarm model. The status can be one of the following values:
ACTIVE
- The alarm model is active and it’s ready to evaluate data.
ACTIVATING
- AWS IoT Events is activating your alarm model. Activating an alarm model can take up to a few minutes.
INACTIVE
- The alarm model is inactive, so it isn’t ready to evaluate data. Check your alarm model information and update the alarm model.
FAILED
- You couldn’t create or update the alarm model. Check your alarm model information and try again.